C.'Elan Unt Weather ronight: Mostly cloudy, low round 600. romorrow: Scattered thunder shovers, high around 750, One hundredfive years of edftori'zlfreedom pTuesday September 10, 1996 ' >: x, ,v './ t} }. 'ny,. , h.'. ... N:f :WY Cw"' 2} $ xZ";s ^. 3S' x Ktttx , [$xi" },5, x, . rti ys.W ikttSt}: a "Q ..°.p t'r ti .fp t .''" '" .. ,.' t A' .. ,F ....: .. . ; ' _., t: A. . : }~;.. : r:: "t . .. ,: Srr f, FY. ,,, .;.^ ,tta ?...:.r ~ ., "". .2 < rc 'rai'n >.. ^' ' < . .v+'^£:iti ' ',Y, a,". e. WOMEN IN POLITICS Women up against opponents, history By Laurie Mayk )aily Staff Reporter Women are kicking off their high s and putting on their walking shoes o it the campaign trail - but they're till fighting an uphill battle, candidates say. Campaigning on campus yesterday with former Texas Gov. Ann Richards, Rep. Lynn Rivers (D-Ann Arbor) said the climb has gotten easier over the years. "Ann, and women like her, pushed the door open to get through, women my age kicked the door open and used -e force, and now it's up to (young women) to walk through the door that's been opened," Rivers said at Cava Java yesterday. During the impromptu visit, cam- paign workers on South Uiversity Avenue encouraged passing students to register to vote in the Nov. 5 election. Richards filed her last election bid in 1994 for Texas governor, but the issues fRing female candidates and legislators en't changed much since then, she said. "It's very predictable, but it's gotten better," Richards said. "Is it harder for women? Yes. Is it more difficult for women to raise money, for women to have the kind of broad-based community support? Yeah," she said. The reason why is often debated. "History - the history of this nation," *hards said "My grandmother could- Pro-Hussein forces take northern Iraq Los Angeles Times WASHINGTON - Kurdish forces backed by Iraqi President Saddam Hussein swept into Sulaymaniyah yes- terday, effectively extending Baghdad's control over all of northern Iraq for the first time since the United States creat- ed a Kurdish haven after the 1991 Persian Gulf War. Sulaymaniyah, the largest Kurdish city with a population of about I million, had been the headquarters of the major setback for U.S. policy in Iraq - under increasing criticism from allies and rivals. "This is a huge victory," said a leading member of the Iraqi National Congress (INC), which is backed by the CIA and has been headquartered in the north. Hussein "showed that America's word does not count for much. He showed the north was his for the taking. And he showed that it is idle and counterproduc- tive and useless to work against him at home." ..I KRISTEN SCHAFER/Daily Former Texas Gov. Ann Richards talks politics with other women at Cava Java on South University Avenue yesterday. Richards was in town campaigning for Rep. Lynn Rivers (D-Ann Arbor). Patriotic Union of which has waged serious battle with the H u s s e i n - K ur d i st a n b a c k e a dic Democratic Party (KDP) since last month. Thousands of refugees fled to the _ Iranian border about 30 miles to the east. Radio it ussain has U.S. admitted officials yester- day that America n't vote because in Texas, women, idiots and imbeciles could not vote." Richards is pounding the pave- ment across the country once again this fall to attend functions with Democratic candidates, including fund-raisers for Rivers and House candidate Debbie Stabenow of Flint. Workers on the Rivers campaign said the tough Texas Democrat was a "big draw" for the fund-raiser, allowing the campaign to exceed its goal for the event. Rivers earned her wings two years ago as a first-term member of Congress, and is now facing a well- financed challenger, Republican busi- ness executive Joe Fitzsimmons, in her re-election campaign. Michigan femame lawmakers The Legislature has 33 female lawmakers, including three senators and 30 representatives 19 are Democrats, 14 are Republicans In November's races, 15 females are challenging male incumbents: 16 female incumbents face male challengers Source: AP Kurdistan (PUK), achieved a tactical suo through Ku quisling" - Senior Penta Tehran claimed a is"" had lost a key bat- tle to the Hussein regime. Yet the ccess Clinton adminis- tration, now in the rrdiSh throes of debating its options, claims it is still better positioned to win gon official the longer war. "Hussein has achieved a tactical success through a Kurdish quisling," a senior Pentagon official said yesterday. "But from our view, the United States has imposed a strategic penalty on him in the south where we both have greater interests. So we feel we're ahead:" President Clinton last week ordered strikes on Iraqi air defense installations in southern Iraq and extended the southern "no-fly" zone north from the 32nd parallel to the 33rd parallel. Rivers said that being a female candi- date has made fund raising difficult for more than one reason. Women are taught to do things for themselves, and it's not easy to call up a supporter and ask for a check, she said. Once women make it to Capitol Hill, voters still view them different- ly than. their male counterparts, Richards said. No matter how hard the fight or how biting the issues. voters expect female legislators to go about their business quietly and sen- sibly, without the backroom deals and formalities of male party poli- tics. "Voters are pretty sure that women are more honest because not enough of us have ever been caught doing some- thing wrong," Richards said. "They think women are more frugal and less See POLITICS, Page 7 half million Kurds were homeless or seeking refuge and appealed for out- side aid to avoid "a human tragedy." The capture of Sulaymaniyah occurred on the same day when the town of Dokan fell to the KDP earlier, giving the group control of a dam that supplies water and power to the region. The 10-day campaign, run by Iraq's elite military Republican Guard and fought largely by the KDP. represents a Student camp-out for hockey tickets nds this year Netanyahu rejects calls to pull out troops Washington officials urge more peace-making talks with Arafat Tickets now sold on first-come, first-serve basis Ann Stewart Staff Reporter Students who banked on camping out to get the best seats for the upcom- ing hockey season woke up to a new rule this year. Due to a change in University ticket office policy, hockey tickets will no longer be sold on a first-come-first- served basis. And the long line that formed early terday out- e the athletic I s ticket office on State Street dis- you don't persed as stu- dents learned wait of the new sales policy. "Nobody has to camp out. bo g th They can come ticket be any time dur- the week," a s said Steven 'm Lambright, ing d ot, manager for Tickets and Promotions. Priority will now be deter- mined by the number of consecutive years that a student has purchased tick- *We wanted to keep it more in line with basketball and reward the students who would buy (hockey) tickets before," Lambright said. Students had mixed reactions to the new policy. "It'- ann that von doan't hae to wait NCAA title and other recent strong seasons. Assistant Athletic Director Bruce Madej said hockey has become incred- ibly competitive in its popularity. "Hockey has jumped in popularity in the last five years and it's still growing. It's growing all over, though," Madej said. Employees said the policy was also changed in fairness to students who couldn't get in line on time in the past because of their class sched- ules. "The demand grown so much," Pod that have to re. But ver ackey Mfore and~ ior. so it uc/ks." - Mike Beres LSA senior for hockey has said LSA senior M i s c h a Gibbons, a tick- et office employee. "So to accommo- date the largest number of peo- ple we decided to do it this way." Though the new policy upset the plans of stu- dents who planned to camp out in hopes of being the first to nab tickets, employees said students were not upset. The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday rejected calls by the Clinton adminis- tration to pull Israeli troops out of Arab-populated areas of the West Bank town of Hebron, while expressing optimism that a formula will soon be found to permit the resumption of peace talks with Syria. Netanyahu's comments came at the end of a day of talks with senior administration officials in Washington, includ- ing President Clinton and Secretary of State Warren Christopher. U.S. leaders used the occasion to urge Israel to build on the "psychological breakthrough" represented by last Wednesday's first-ever meeting between Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority leader Yasser Arafat. State Department spokesperson Nicholas Burns said that Christopher had urged Netanyahu to "ease the pain" of Palestinians bottled up in the Gaza Strip and West Bank by permitting more of them to enter Israel. He said that the United States expected Netanyahu's Likud administration to live up to the commitments made by the previous Labor government on both Hebron and the Palestinians, but would not hold Israel to any "fixed timetable." According to Israeli officials, Netanyahu resisted U.S. calls for a Netanyahu pullback from Hebron, arguing that such a step could create an "explosive" situation in the West Bank town that could damage the entire Middle East peace process. Israeli troops were required to pull back from Arab population centers in Hebron by last March, guarding only the 440 or so Jews in the town. After his meeting with Clinton, Netanyahu described the Jewish community in Hebron as the "oldest in the world," dating back 3,500 years. He said he told Christopher that improving security in the town was "not only an Israeli interest but (also) a Palestinian interest." Israeli officials said that the main purpose of yesterday's round of talks in Washington was to work on a formula for the resumption of direct talks between Israel and Syria, which were suspended in May following bomb attacks in Jersusalem on Israeli buses. The new Israeli government is ready to resume the talks but is refusing to commit itself to KRISTEN SCHAFER/Daily LSA junior Elizabeth Train reads about women's health and AIDS at Shaman Drum bookstore yesterday. The store was also distributing free condoms to University students. Students sa they practice safe sex, m--onogamy "Nobody's commented negatively so far," Lambright said. Still, students at the ticket office said they were disappointed that they missed out on the ticket-buying tradi- tion because of the change. "I was kind of mad that I couldn't (wait overnight) because I didn't buy tickets last year," said Nursing senior Christine Hveman. "I feel like thev By Jeff Cox Daily Staff Reporter With all the diverse interests and personalities on campus, it would seem that there would not be one activity that people from every corner of the earth share week. While many students are sex- ually active, the survey said this does not mean they are promis- cuous. "Most of our respondents practice serial monogamy," said Martin Whyte said he was skep- tical of the Playboy study. "I think that 90 percent would be pretty high," Whyte said. Despite that, some student behavior seemed to confirm it. "I'm sexually active, but I'm I ,I